Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Power Technology

Some Electric Car Drivers Might Spew More CO2 Than Diesel Cars, New Research Shows (bloomberg.com) 469

bricko shares a report from Bloomberg with the caption, "Making batteries is a mess": Beneath the hoods of millions of the clean electric cars rolling onto the world's roads in the next few years will be a dirty battery. Every major carmaker has plans for electric vehicles to cut greenhouse gas emissions, yet their manufacturers are, by and large, making lithium-ion batteries in places with some of the most polluting grids in the world. By 2021, capacity will exist to build batteries for more than 10 million cars running on 60 kilowatt-hour packs, according to data of Bloomberg NEF. Most supply will come from places like China, Thailand, Germany and Poland that rely on non-renewable sources like coal for electricity.

An electric vehicle in Germany would take more than 10 years to break even with an efficient combustion engine's emissions. "We're facing a bow wave of additional CO2 emissions," said Andreas Radics, a managing partner at Munich-based automotive consultancy Berylls Strategy Advisors, which argues that for now, drivers in Germany or Poland may still be better off with an efficient diesel engine. The findings, among the more bearish ones around, show that while electric cars are emission-free on the road, they still discharge a lot of the carbon-dioxide that conventional cars do. Just to build each car battery -- weighing upwards of 500 kilograms (1,100 pounds) in size for sport-utility vehicles -- would emit up to 74 percent more C02 than producing an efficient conventional car if it's made in a factory powered by fossil fuels in a place like Germany, according to Berylls' findings. Yet regulators haven't set out clear guidelines on acceptable carbon emissions over the life cycle of electric cars, even as the likes of China, France and the U.K. move toward outright bans of combustion engines.
It all has to do with manufacturing. According to estimates of Mercedes-Benz's electric-drive system integration department, manufacturing an electric car pumps out "significantly" more climate-warming gases than a conventional car, which releases only 20 percent of its lifetime CO2 at this stage. "Just switching to renewable energy for manufacturing would slash emissions by 65 percent, according to Transport & Environment," reports Bloomberg. "In Norway, where hydro-electric energy powers practically the entire grid, the Berylls study showed electric cars generate nearly 60 percent less CO2 over their lifetime, compared with even the most efficient fuel-powered vehicles."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Some Electric Car Drivers Might Spew More CO2 Than Diesel Cars, New Research Shows

Comments Filter:
  • by JoshuaZ ( 1134087 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @08:13AM (#57491470) Homepage
    This doesn't seem to take into account that many grids are rapidly improving in terms of how much solar and wind they have in the grids. If an electric car hits breakeven compared to a highly efficient diesel car given 5 years given current rates for example, then in practice we should expect that to happen even earlier. Moreover, electric cars have very long potential lifespans since they contain few moving parts (there's correspondingly less maintenance on an electric car than on an ICE car). Of course, the most efficient thing to do is still to not have a car, and use public transport; unfortunately for many people that isn't a practical option.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @08:58AM (#57491780) Homepage Journal

      It's also only looking at CO2, and ignoring the other pollution. Diesels put out a lot of harmful particulate matter right where people live and breathe.

      • by awe_cz ( 818201 )
        This really depends on which emission standard are we talking about. If you compare EURO6 diesel car with similarly sized electric car in Germany, you might end up with more harmful emissions (NOx, HC, PM) from coal portion of the electricity needed. Yes, it's being produced somewhere else than city centre, but still it's far from ideal.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          That's extremely unlikely, especially considering that Germany has been replacing coal plants with newer, less polluting ones. Plus with the huge amount of solar installed in Germany it's quite likely that if you wanted an electric car for emissions reasons you could get solar PV to charge it too.

      • Diesels put out a lot of harmful particulate matter right where people live and breathe.

        No more than diesels do [slashdot.org]. And if they're cars without a catalyst, like my 1982 300SD or my lady's 2006 Sprinter, then the soot they DO emit is much larger than the soot that gassers spew out. In fact, nearly all of it is large enough for cilia to sweep it out of pockets in your lungs, and for it to be removed during normal sputum production and expectoration. It's only diesels with catalysts which emit primarily PM2.5 and smaller.

  • Bizzarro world (Score:5, Insightful)

    by MMC Monster ( 602931 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @08:14AM (#57491482)

    Just goes to show you how frightened some people are regarding electric cars. I don't see why so many people (that are not in the gas-powered car industry) are scared of them.

    Obviously it's better to concentrate all the emissions at the factories that produce batteries and mitigate the pollution concerns there, rather than at the tail pipe of all the cars that are coming out of the factories.

    ObXKCD: https://xkcd.com/437/ [xkcd.com]

    • I don't think people are frightened so much as refuse to pay or simply cannot pay double price on a very expensive item. Improve battery technology so that instead of just the battery costing the same as an entire econobox car, it's only 500-2000 USD and it will be hard to find people who still want gas powered cars.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by enjar ( 249223 )

        There are plenty of used full electric and plug-in cars on the market now. Plenty of used Volts and Leafs out there, at prices very comparable to other used small sedans. In a few years we will have used Bolts and Model 3s coming into the used market when people trade them in at the 3-5 year mark.

        Battery prices continue to drop, but the more I hear the "OMG THE BATTERY IS SOOOOO EXPENSIVE", the more I'm convinced it's ignorance, FUD, or some combination of both. No one says "OMG REPLACING MY ENGINE OR TRANS

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • It dosent help that in many regions of the world the electric grid is powered substantially by fossil fuels. If we are talking CO2, electric car mileage is only as clean as the electricity you use, powering it from a coal plant doesn't generate much or perhaps any CO2 savings. Throw in the fact 5 to 40 tons of CO2 go into manufacturing traditional vehicles, and electrics tend to be even higher, and the actual CO2 savings isn't as much as most people want it to be. You can still save in emissions, but whe
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • I think that electric is the future

          I believe that synthetic liquid fuels are the future of transportation. We won't have electric airplanes. We won't have transoceanic shipping. We might be able to electrify trains but that requires lots of infrastructure which requires lots of costs. Trains will be running on diesel fuels for a very long time. Personal commuter cars are just a part of our transportation needs. Lots of people and goods move by long haul trucks and buses, and those won't be running on electricity any time soon. Electri

  • by blkhawk ( 786915 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @08:20AM (#57491504) Homepage

    For a diesel Volvo vs a Tesla model S, assuming the average 2015 power mix in Europe the break even point is about 28.000Km.

    I did take some big shortcuts tho. I compared 100kwh worth of Panasonic LiPo batteries + power to the diesel fuel needed to drive the volvo the same distance using Tesla Model S power usage figures.

    There are way to slew this in one or the other direction - for instance I did also add CO2 Equivalent for refining the diesel.

    Considering where Berylls Strategy Advisors is located and the fact that the German car companies still have no mass-market ready electric car my guess is that this is fake news and can be disregarded.

  • by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve ( 949321 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @08:20AM (#57491506)
    I'm admitting that I just looked at the summary. So assuming it's accurate...

    Why is it that so many people misunderstand the purpose of electric cars? I don't know why for years now on Slashdot we keep getting posts about articles that nitpick about electric car manufacturing. "Ooh, at one place in your manufacturing chain for 1 second you involved coal, so the whole idea is trash." No it's not. First of all, electric cars don't burn gasoline. Big win there. Reducing petroleum use is a Good Thing. Second, with time electricity sources to both charge said vehicles and produce the batteries could come from renewable sources. The fact that we aren't there today doesn't mean we won't be there soon enough. Having production lines in place to make these vehicles is smart and when the production sources are from renewable energy, what will they complain about next?
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by RedK ( 112790 )

      No one misunderstands the purpose of the electric car.

      People question the value of paying a premium for a supposedly "green" solution.

      You're sold a reduction of emissions. Governements subsidize a reduction in emission. If you're not actually reducing emissions, that's a whole lot of money getting spent on things you're not receiving.

      • You're forgetting that the problem isn't only CO2.
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        If your primary goal is to be green then why stop at buying the car?

        Switch electricity provider to one that only buys renewable energy. Get some solar panels. If you live in one of these few places were somehow electricity production is even dirtier than diesel cars it's not like there isn't anything you can do about it.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        No, the only selling point for an EV is when it's energy use is cheaper than fossil fuels. There are entire sources of bio-diesel, and alcohol-blended gasoline that can reduce the input carbon value, but they still put out carbon. EV's do not put out carbon, so the more EV's there are replacing non-EV's, the less carbon there is being put out on a daily basis, but if the entire world switched to EV's overnight, the Energy capacity to charge the vehicles would increase carbon from having coal/natural gas/etc

        • You can bust up used radioactive stuff and split it down to something safe. It just costs a lot of more energy and money.

          In some hypothetical future, with very cheap energy, they can tackle this. Sam with using robots to sort landfills for recycling, which many will live to see.

          I'll even bet some will whine how this or that city sold off their landfills to robo-companies for pennies on the dollar!

    • I'm admitting that I just looked at the summary. So assuming it's accurate...

      Why is it that so many people misunderstand the purpose of electric cars? I don't know why for years now on Slashdot we keep getting posts about articles that nitpick about electric car manufacturing. "Ooh, at one place in your manufacturing chain for 1 second you involved coal, so the whole idea is trash." No it's not. First of all, electric cars don't burn gasoline. Big win there. Reducing petroleum use is a Good Thing. Second, with time electricity sources to both charge said vehicles and produce the batteries could come from renewable sources. The fact that we aren't there today doesn't mean we won't be there soon enough. Having production lines in place to make these vehicles is smart and when the production sources are from renewable energy, what will they complain about next?

      Well what is the purpose then?

      The way I see it, if you're going to get a new car then buying an electric vehicle pushes the technology along and may be slightly better for the environment.

      Though, if you're looking to minimize your environmental impact (while still driving) then the old advice is still the best advice, get a smaller used car and run it into the ground.

      Which is just a version how the best advice on how to reduce your environmental impact in general, the less money you spend the smaller your e

  • Germany is going all in on renewable sources, you see solar power all over. Which is strange for a fairly cloudy country. It certainly worked this year, since the had the hottest, driest summer on record. But after the Fukushima disaster, they closed down all their nuclear power plants. To make up for it, they have to expand the use of coal and buy electricity from nuclear power plants in France, which has plants right across from the German border.
    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @08:47AM (#57491680)

      This is false. Germany still runs majority of its nuclear plants. Less than half was closed after Fukushima (8/17). The current plan is to phase them out as their useful life span ends, and not upgrade/build new ones. This phase out is ongoing and is being constantly postponed at this point as reality of having no chance of meeting CO2 targets with all the coal fired plants they have to run to compensate is starting to dawn on non-crazy parts of environmentalist movement.

      The problem is that those closed plants alone accounted for a sizeable chunk of energy, so Germany went from net exporter to net importer overnight, while having to fire up all of its mothballed coal plants, and import from Poland which built up a lot of coal power near German border with correct expectations that Germany will need it.

      Thing is though, coal power is still a lot cleaner than gasoline/diesel automotive ICE in almost every metric. A LOT cleaner. Even in just the CO2 aspects, without getting into the whole "particulates, NOx, etc" brouhaha, which is close to zero on modern coal fired plant, but significant and emitted at surface level by automotive ICEs. Which is still one of the major causes of harm to humans in more congested areas that has nothing to do with global warming.

      • by afidel ( 530433 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @10:26AM (#57492420)

        Even in just the CO2 aspects, without getting into the whole "particulates, NOx, etc" brouhaha, which is close to zero on modern coal fired plant

        Not sure where you get that idea, using 3mi/kWh and the average coal plant in my region I figured out that the NOx emissions from an EV running on coal are several times worse than the current EPA standard for passenger vehicles, about as dirty as the dieselgate VWs in fact. Particulates are harder as the PM2.5 and PM5 are going to be in places with low population densities which is probably an overall improvement for health. For CO2 it's close, a hybrid is cleaner than a 3mi/kWh EV when running on coal. But put a reasonable amount of renewables into the mix and use natural gas instead of coal and the EV wins by a large amount.

    • But after the Fukushima disaster, they closed down all their nuclear power plants. To make up for it, they have to expand the use of coal

      This is false, the decrease in nuclear output has been more than adequately followed by an increase in renewable generation. [cleanenergywire.org]

      and buy electricity from nuclear power plants in France

      This is also false, Germany has actually shifted into net exports. [renewable-ei.org]

    • by blindseer ( 891256 ) <blindseer@noSPAm.earthlink.net> on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @01:46PM (#57493790)

      But after the Fukushima disaster, they closed down all their nuclear power plants.

      What did Fukushima have to do with nuclear power in Germany? Fukushima was hit by an earthquake and then a once in 500 year high wave. Are these German nuclear power plants prone to earthquakes? Are they even close enough to an ocean to even have the possibility of a once in a thousand year wave?

      Fukushima had nothing to do with nuclear power in Germany. All it did was give an excuse for the already anti-nuke politicians to shut them down. A very weak excuse. If Germany was serious about reducing their CO2 output then they'd keep their nuclear power plants open and build more of them for the future.

      The German government has already announced that they'd fail to meet their CO2 reduction goals set during the Paris Agreement. If they kept their nuclear power running then they might have been able to meet their goals.

      No nation that wants a modern economy will be able to get one or keep it without nuclear power. That includes Germany.

  • standard FUD (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ganv ( 881057 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @08:26AM (#57491528)
    This is standard FUD. Of course you can do twisted calculations where you penalize battery production for the fact that existing electricity and transportation systems burn coal and hydrocarbons and claim that we can't build new electric transportation infrastructure because it requires energy. But their option of sticking with hydrocarbons is a long term disaster, both because of CO2 and because it keeps getting more expensive and energy intensive to extract hydrocarbons. If you also penalize hydrocarbon burning for the waste and pollution produced by oil extraction, batteries still end up ahead in the current US or European economies (on emissions, not yet on cost). If we as a global society plan to shift to sustainable CO2 emissions, we have to switch to driving less, and using renewable electricity for the driving we do.
    • Re:standard FUD (Score:5, Insightful)

      by enjar ( 249223 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @10:52AM (#57492590) Homepage
      It's remarkably similar to the FUD that traces electric power back to the generation source to criticize EVs, but then assumes gasoline magically appears in underground tanks below the gas pump. No mention of the cost of erecting extraction platforms, transporting crude around the globe, cracking it to make gas/diesel, then putting it in trucks to deliver to the tank. The FUD also assumes the dirtiest coal plant from the era of Charles Dickens is generating the power.
  • by b0bby ( 201198 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @08:27AM (#57491534)

    OK, I read this article and it seems like the definition of FUD. The headline is "The Dirt on Clean Electric Cars", and there's a lot of largely-irrelevant charts and statistics. The most damning statement they make is:

    An electric vehicle in Germany would take more than 10 years to break even with an efficient combustion engine’s emissions

    Yet further down, they have to admit:

    To be sure, other studies show that even in coal-dominant Poland, using an electric car would emit 25 percent less carbon dioxide than a diesel car

    So basically, on the worst emitting grids, today, an EV might have about the same emissions as the cleanest diesel; everywhere else they are clearly lower. And the grid in most places is getting steadily cleaner; a diesel made today will not be getting better emissions in 10 years.

    • Did you even look at their "research"? (No, because it's behind a login, so you can't see what bullshit they did to get those numbers.)

      • by b0bby ( 201198 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @08:38AM (#57491610)

        No, you're right, I didn't. It does reflect what the Union of Concerned Scientist's calculator shows; in certain areas, an EV currently is not much cleaner than a Prius. In lots of other areas, however, they are quite a lot cleaner.

        https://www.ucsusa.org/clean-v... [ucsusa.org]

        So an EV is not as clean as riding a bike, but if you are going to be driving a car in an area with a reasonably clean grid and want to get the most efficient car you can, you should get an EV.

  • Isn't this the same Bloomberg that hasn't shown any evidence that SuperMicro boards were hacked?
    https://www.businessinsider.co... [businessinsider.com]

  • Government mandate (Score:4, Insightful)

    by JudeanPeople'sFront ( 729601 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @08:35AM (#57491582)

    "Every major carmaker has plans for electric vehicles to cut greenhouse gas emissions". Not because the market demands it or because their customers want it.

    For people who want electric cars, they have their Priuses, Volts, Teslas, etc. That market is served by several manufacturers and it expands as the demand grows. However *every* manufacturer has to comply with government regulations like CAFE and such. So everyone makes at least one "compliance" model to reduce the average fleet emissions to within regulations. Otherwise - fines, more expensive cars, consumers pay more or the company can't compete and goes bankrupt.

    Even a driver-friendly company like Mazda, recently had to kiss the ring and announce "compliance" models. Which no customer of their usual fast-and-fun-to-drive cars wants. So these models fill fail in the market and the costs will be paid by the customers.

  • Didn't I read on Slashdot that Germany was a world leader in renewable energy? So why does this article seem to indicate that Germany is particularly bad for producing cars using fossil fuels?
    • Renewable energy is not that green and produces significant emissions during the totality of its lifecycle..... Additionally Germany slashed its nuclear energy use causing a MASSIVE spike is greenhouse gas emissions. Germany has been like a child these last 20 years, jumping from one green fad to another without implementing the slow-untrendy-yet effective changes.
  • by ottffssent ( 18387 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @08:40AM (#57491618)

    BNEF has access to good research and should have written a better article. Instead they've constructed a clickbait article full of gibberish that obscures rather than illuminates what data they do deign to present:

    1. An average EV is less polluting, per mile, than even the best gasoline or diesel vehicle.
    2. If that EV were built with dirty power, and charged throughout its life with dirty power, it would still be a net win, albeit a small one verging on a tie, on lifetime emissions.
    3. We're projected to be be building a whole lot of new EVs.

    And there's no mention of the obvious objections to this sort of facile analysis:
    1. The average new EV probably displaces a purchase of an average new gasmobile, so the comparison with the most-efficient gasmobile is unrealistic. If the average new EV driver is particularly eco-conscious, and would otherwise be buying a highly-efficient gasmobile, that new driver is probably also sourcing the power from cleaner-than-average supplies, so calculating as if it were charged from the average local grid is unrealistic.
    2. Grid carbon intensities are dropping worldwide, and the speed of this drop is accelerating as renewables get cheaper and cheaper relative to fossil-fueled plants. New renewables are cheaper than new thermal power plants almost everywhere, and we're only a few years away from new renewables being cheaper than continuing to fuel an already-built thermal plant in some parts of the world. Over a 15-year lifespan, EVs will keep getting cleaner per-mile, whereas gasmobiles will wear out and become less efficient.
    3. While the article focuses on manufacturing emissions, their own graphs show that these correspond to only about 2 years worth of tailpipe emissions. A worthwhile target for reduction, for sure (and one that will happen naturally, as large manufacturers consistently seek to reduce their power costs by buying cheap renewable energy), but not the big target that we should be focusing on. The running costs dominate lifetime emissions, so we should tackle them first (especially as cleaning up electricity generation world-wide would also significantly reduce manufacturing emissions).

    BNEF usually produces much better analysis than this. I'm disappointed in them.

  • Look at the Source (Score:5, Informative)

    by mwfischer ( 1919758 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @08:42AM (#57491640) Journal

    All the article is saying is if you make dirty batteries, you get a dirty product. The spin on it was impressive saying fuck electric cars. (disclosure - telsa owner)

    After some google and linked in stalking, all the partners at the firm Berylls Strategic Advisors are a mouthpiece for the big oil think tank part of the Oliver Wyman firm.

    However the partner of Berylls (whom came from Audi and OW) is saying buy diesel cars instead.

    We all know German diesel cars are totally very much extremely only the best people clean. re: audi, vw

  • by plague911 ( 1292006 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @08:43AM (#57491650)

    Just to build each car battery -- weighing upwards of 500 kilograms (1,100 pounds) in size for sport-utility vehicles -- would emit up to 74 percent more C02 than producing an efficient conventional car

    10 years to break even Meaning that you know since cars last more than 10 years..... electric cars would beat ICEs under even the most pro ICE environment......

    .

  • "According to estimates of Mercedes-Benz..."

    Well, well, well, if that isn't one of those companies who defrauded their clients and killed thousands of people and still only a handful managers are in jail.

    Shouldn't they better shut the fuck up?

  • by jlv ( 5619 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @09:28AM (#57491980)

    "Some ... might ..."

    Just more FUD from the petro and ICE mfgs showing how EVs are bad for everything. Sigh.

    A slightly better read:
    https://www.forbes.com/sites/e... [forbes.com]

    (disclaimer: I've only driven an EV for almost 5 years. We've got over 60K combined miles on our LEAF and Model S)

  • It's the short sellers!!!!!

  • by Austerity Empowers ( 669817 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @09:30AM (#57492010)

    The biggest advantage of electric cars is not the 3x efficiency, it's not the incredible acceleration, and it's only partly the lack of post-purchase carbon emissions. It's that everything is much more fungible. I do not delude myself that my electric car is not polluting, I get my power from the texas power grid, which is 34% natural gas and 30% coal [scientificamerican.com]. The 3x efficiency combined with getting 28% from less polluting sources is a big step forward, but ultimately just part of the solution.

    The main advantage is that it is easier to pressure ERCOT to change their ways than it is to cause millions of texans to change their ways (and buy new vehicles, which itself is pretty nasty for the environment). If the major source of carbon emissions for electric cars is the manufacturers, we can get after them. These entities are capable of working with their governments to come up with a timeline, and a way of managing the expenses to make change happen. Joe Sixpack in his 1967 pickup is unreachable, possibly couldn't afford to fix it if he wanted to, and might not comply if he didn't.

    As long as people are driving around with combustion engines, we can pass laws and scream and yell and nothing will change.

  • Germany and Poland that rely on non-renewable sources like coal for electricity.
    Germany does not rely on coal.
    We produce 40% of our electricity with renewable and ~10% with nuclear power.
    So coal and gas is less than 50% ... how many other countries manage that?

  • Bewildering (Score:5, Interesting)

    by cshark ( 673578 ) on Wednesday October 17, 2018 @09:53AM (#57492144)

    This is a terrible argument, and a poorly written article over on Bloomberg. The writer got themselves so flustered that they couldn't be bothered to proof-read, or make a coherent point that doesn't stretch credulity. I would call this, "panic journalism."

    You can't do statistics this way because methods of generating power are shifting. Coal plants are dying off across the world. Part of the problem with this article, not to defend coal, is that there is no one way to measure coal emissions. It depends largely on when the power plants were constructed, what the local regulations are, and the size of the plant. You can't just run an average on it, and hope to be close to the truth of the matter. Even comparing Poland to Belarus is silly. And it gets sillier when you start talking about Germany and France.

    But even that is mundane when you put it in the terms stated. Europe, as we all know is working hard to solve the power problem. They're doing it in ways that are a lot more radical than anything we've seen in the US. To start talking about carbon footprints, as they stand today, before the industry has even taken hold is throwing away the baby with the bathwater.

    Of course, when it comes to panic journalism, that's kinda the point, so I can't fault them for that.

Avoid strange women and temporary variables.

Working...